Why MYSTERIES? Because that is the genre I read. Why PARADISE? Because that is where I live.
Among other things, this blog, the result of a 2008 New Year's resolution, will act as a record of books that I've read, and random thoughts.

22 February 2015

Review: THIS DARK ROAD TO MERCY, Wiley Cash

The critically acclaimed author of the New York Times bestseller A Land More Kind Than Home returns
with a resonant novel of love and atonement, blood and vengeance, set
in western North Carolina, involving two young sisters, a wayward
father, and an enemy determined to see him pay for his sins.

After
their mother's unexpected death, twelve-year-old Easter and her
six-year-old sister Ruby are adjusting to life in foster care when their
errant father, Wade, suddenly appears. Since Wade signed away his legal
rights, the only way he can get his daughters back is to steal them
away in the night.

Brady Weller, the girls' court-appointed
guardian, begins looking for Wade, and he quickly turns up unsettling
information linking Wade to a recent armored car heist, one with a
whopping $14.5 million missing. But Brady Weller isn't the only one
hunting the desperate father. Robert Pruitt, a shady and mercurial man
nursing a years-old vendetta, is also determined to find Wade and claim
his due.

Narrated by a trio of alternating voices, This Dark Road to Mercy is a story about the indelible power of family and the primal desire to outrun a past that refuses to let go.

My Take

This book is probably at the very edge of the crime fiction genre - crimes have been committed, even murders, but that is not the central theme of the story. What is central is a father's attempt to re-establish a relationship with his two daughters. He gradually wins both of them over, but they are all on the run.

The story asks a moral question - when Wade, who signed away his legal rights to his children, decides he wants to re-establish them, should he be allowed to? Or are they better off without him?